
Call Auction
A call auction, or call market, is where market participants place orders to buy or sell at certain bid or offered (ask) prices, which are then batched together and matched at predetermined time intervals. The auctioneer will execute limit orders to buy at the clearing price or below and limit orders to sell at the clearing price or above. Call markets are useful for illiquid securities or assets. Orders batched into call auctions are “priced” orders, meaning all orders are limit orders; there are no market orders involved. The stock's specialist gathers the following buy and sell orders beforehand: Buy 50 shares at $885 Buy 75 shares at $875 Buy 100 shares at $870 Sell 100 shares at $870 Sell 75 shares at $880 Sell 50 shares at $890 A call auction, or call market, is where market participants place orders to buy or sell at certain bid or offered (ask) prices, which are then batched together and matched at predetermined time intervals.

What Is a Call Auction?
A call auction, or call market, is where market participants place orders to buy or sell at certain bid or offered (ask) prices, which are then batched together and matched at predetermined time intervals. Orders collected during a call auction are all executed at the price that forms the best overall match. Call auction rules may vary by exchange.




Understanding Call Auctions
In the securities market, a call auction replaces the method of continuously matching orders. Buyers set a maximum price at which they will buy the shares and sellers set a minimum price at which they are willing to sell the shares.
Most major stock markets open and close trading with a call auction, while a continuous market for trading operates the rest of the day. Call auctions batch orders together to create large multilateral trades in which buyers and sellers arrive at a single price.
In a traditional call auction, an auctioneer "calls" out to solicit buy and sell orders for a security and then groups them for execution at specified times during a trading day. The auctioneer's job is to best match the supply and demand of a security to arrive at a clearing price.
All market orders for purchase and sale will be executed at that clearing price. The auctioneer will execute limit orders to buy at the clearing price or below and limit orders to sell at the clearing price or above.
Call markets are useful for illiquid securities or assets.
Benefits of a Call Auction
An electronic call auction clears buy and sell orders for a given asset at predetermined points in time. By bunching many transactions together, a call market increases liquidity and can significantly decrease transaction costs for participants. As an alternative market structure, call auctions impact order flow and handling decisions, price discovery, and market transparency.
Orders batched into call auctions are “priced” orders, meaning all orders are limit orders; there are no market orders involved. By contrast, in continuous trading, limit orders only trade at their limit prices when the market prices trigger the limit.
In the call auction, however, prices can improve for everyone. For instance, a buy order in a call may list $20.50 as the maximum price to pay but actually execute at $20.40. A seller, meanwhile, may have had the lowest price limit of $20.30, but receive $20.40 in the call auction.
Call auctions are more liquid than continuous trading markets, while continuous trading markets give participants greater flexibility.
Call Auctions vs. Continuous Trading
In a continuous trading market, traders can trade at any time when the market is open. Buyers and sellers continuously place their orders and are matched on a continuous basis. Most markets that we see today, including the stock exchanges, derivatives exchanges, and the forex market, are continuous trading markets.
In a call auction, trades are instead executed according to an order-driven system. They use single-price auctions that match the orders of buyers and sellers and then a single trading price is chosen that will maximize volume.
Both types of markets have their own advantages and disadvantages. The biggest advantage of a call auction is that it provides high liquidity as all traders interested in a security have to make their trades at the same time and place. Continuous markets, meanwhile, give traders the flexibility to make their trades whenever they want.
Example of a Call Auction
A call auction is initiated in an illiquid stock to be traded at 1:00 p.m. EST. The stock's specialist gathers the following buy and sell orders beforehand:
The best match is decided at $870 per share. This is the call price that is executed for all orders that have been batched together at that moment.
Related terms:
At-the-Market
An at-the-market order buys or sells a stock or futures contract at the prevailing market bid or ask price at the time it gets processed. read more
Batch Trading
Batch trading refers to an accumulation of orders that are executed simultaneously. read more
Bid and Ask
The term "bid and ask" refers to a two-way price quotation that indicates the best price at which a security can be sold and bought at a given point in time. read more
Call
A call is an option contract and it is also the term for the establishment of prices through a call auction. The term also has several other meanings in business and finance. read more
What Is a Clearing Price?
Clearing price is the equilibrium monetary value of a traded security, asset, or good determined by the bid-ask process of buyers and sellers. read more
Continuous Trading
Continuous trading is a method for transacting security orders and involves the immediate execution of orders upon receipt by market makers. read more
Illiquid
Illiquid is the state of a security or other asset that cannot quickly and easily be sold or exchanged for cash without a substantial loss in value. read more
Limit Order
A limit order is used to buy or sell a security at a pre-determined price and will not execute unless the security's price meets those qualifications. read more
Liquidity
Liquidity refers to the ease with which an asset, or security, can be converted into ready cash without affecting its market price. read more
Market Order
A market order is an instruction to a broker to buy or sell a stock or other asset immediately at the best available current price. read more